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Estimate of the numbers
remain vague, but what is clear is more people arrived at Sakharov Prospect
than attended the previous demonstration on December 10. The official
headcount was 30,000 while the organizers claim 100,000 demonstrators turned
out.

The police presence was roughly the same as during the previous protest on
Bolotnaya square with 40 buses of policemen and a helicopter hovering over
the prospect. According to police there were 29,000 and according to
organizers more the 100,000. Blogger Andrei Navalny even mentioned 120,000
protestors, but bne staff estimate the crowd was only a bit bigger than on
Bolotnaya sq, maybe about 60k people.

Smaller rallies were held in other cities like Vladivostok where 2000 people
have taken to the streets despite the -20C weather and driving snow.
Thousands more have signed up via social networking sites for protests in
more than 80 Russian cities.

Alexei Navalny anti-corruption fighter and blogger gave his inaugural address
to the crowd and was very well. In a provocative speech he called for a
million people to come on to the streets in the next demonstration and
demanded fresh parliamentary elections. He also called on the people to
boycott the presidential vote and not to cast a single vote for Putin.

"We know what we will do. We will go out onto the street until they give
back what is ours. Next time, we will bring one million people onto the
streets of Moscow," he said to cheers. "We do not want to scare
anyone. But I promise you that next year the leaders will change and power
will belong to those to whom it should belong. Power will belong to the
people!" reported AFP.

Former finance minister Alexei Kudrin had a similar message for the crowds
calling for political change in an organized way but to avoid
"revolution," he said.

"There are a lot of slogans here but less action," Kudrin told the
crowd. "You can't just talk. You've got to start doing something...
creation of a platform for dialogue is needed. Otherwise there will be
revolution, otherwise we lose the opportunity before us today for the
peaceful transformation and the trust that are necessary for a new leadership
that will be elected."

The former finance minister said the reform process needed to begin with
passage of new laws on political parties followed by legal registration of
those parties and an election campaign.

"Only after that can we hold elections," Kudrin said, calling for
the resolution adopted after Saturday's rally should contain a call for early
parliamentary elections.

Even Ksenia Sobchak called for pressure but not revolution and called on the
crowd to maintain the pressure but in an orderly fashion.

Russian oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov appeared but didn’t speak to the crowd,
instead he talked to individuals in what looked like a classic bit of “meet
the people” campaigning.

At the end of demonstration organisers approved resolution:

1. authorities must release all political prisoners

2. cancel the results of the December 10th parliamentary election

3. Central Elections Commission Head Vladimir Churov must resign

4. new election should be held as soon as possible

5. all oppositional parties should be registered.

The main slogan shouted by the crowd as: "no voice for Putin!"

Talking to the crowd there was no feeling of slowing of momentum. "I was
really inspired by [the previous demonstration] Bolotnaya Square," said
one demonstrator."I was not interested in politics at all until
then."

The mood of the crowd was also switching from 'any one but Putin' and 'any party
but not United Russia' to more constructive. But both protesters and
organizers admit there is still no party or leader who could beat Putin in a
straight election right now.

Amongst these have been calls for the sacking of Churov who is widely seen as
orchestrating the ballot stuffing in the December 14 Duma elections – a
demand the Kremlin appears to willing to meet.

The call for a re-run of the Duma election is so far not on the table, but
Russian president Dmitry Medvedev came out on Friday with a large package of
“mass reforms” to the political system that will “decentralize” the political
system by devolving more power to the regional authorities. Amongst the
changes will be the re-introduction of elections for regional governors that
Putin nix on taking office in 2000.

A crackdown on the opposition to curb the movement now seems more unlikely,
even if the Kremlin will attempt to play a balancing game between concessions
and low level harassment movement in an attempt to limit its effectiveness.

The diversity of speakers nevertheless were all on the same message and it is
hard to see how the Kremlin will be able to ignore responding to these
demands to some extent. The pressure is now likely to build towards the
presidential election in March, which will be tense as Putin will have to
fight a real campaign.